sunny baudelaire i love you

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sunny baudelaire i love you
It is always interesting to me when someone tells me a story that they think is not about themselves, when of course it almost always is.
I canāt say this enough, even as a full grown adult, a fully degreed librarian, who has read many things, many types of books.
A Series of Unfortunate Events is masterful.
It pulls from all worlds of knowledge, all variations of literature, religions, philosophies, cultures, even cuisine. Itās not just a fictional story of a secret organization and some orphans, itās a metaphor for censorship, for the corruption of the justice system, the neglect of the foster system, the questionable nature of public education, but the equally complex nature of sheltering yourself from harsh truths, even if those truths could also help you.
The morality of the neutrality of librarians (a phrase which here means, āwhether or not a librarian should give a patron whatever they ask for, even if what they want is misinformationā). The endless search for answers in a confusing world. The rather bleak understanding that every generation basically acts the same way as the previous ones, unaware of the neverending cycle. If there are really such things as āgoodā and ābadā people. And the eventuality and unavoidability of death.
And Snicket, as the readerās guide, never tells you what to think, only what certain terms mean, and leaves the reader to come to their own conclusions. He trusts our own intelligence.
I cannot properly convey how much I appreciate Daniel Handler for putting this series into the world.
May I present: The Lemony Snicket Test
if you answer ānoā to these questions youāre doing a lot better than Lemony Snicket
Are you currently hanging off the outside of a moving train?
Are you retelling the story of your ex girlfriendās three children being chased by a really misunderstood theater kid who also happened to be your best childhood friend and your sisterās lover?
Are you currently on the lamb?
if you answered āyesā to any of these questions, I highly recommend you seek help.
If anyone is looking for a Christmas Hannukah present, I highly recommend The Latke Who Couldn't Stop Screaming, by Daniel Handler Lemony Snicket.
It's the story of a little latke who has to deal with obnoxious Christmas decorations who think Hannukah is Jewish Christmas. And also being fried in hot oil.
"I will love you as misfortune loves orphans, as fire loves innocence, and as justice loves to sit and watch while everything goes wrong."
Lemony Snicket, The Beatrice Letters
Sugar Bowl (derogatory) VS Sugar Bowl (affectionate #mysugarbowl)